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24 Apr 2004, 07:19 (Ref:949804) | #1 | ||
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Porous Bearings
I have only average mechanical skills so please don't respond too technically!!
Has anyone heard of this term and what does it mean? I can't imagine oil actually impregnating the surface of a bearing shell. I heard the term used in conjunction with an old A-Series engine (yes the Austin/Morris/MG type!!) |
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24 Apr 2004, 07:50 (Ref:949813) | #2 | |||
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From r31skylineclub.com
Quote:
Brass can, so I'm guessing there is a possibility that other metals ca...or the bearing is made from brass, but I wouldn't think so. |
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24 Apr 2004, 11:12 (Ref:949918) | #3 | |||
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Surface Treatment
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I would have thought the idea was to case harden or somehow otherwise (a type of chrome?)provide the inner face with a long wearing surface that would maintain a film of oil between it and the spinning crank jounal faces??? (obviously outta my depth here) |
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24 Apr 2004, 20:18 (Ref:950350) | #4 | ||
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I think that older bearing types were a made of a metal called babbet/white metal or an aloy of containing it. It was some time ago that I did my motor vehicle engineering course so I might be wrong I do not know if it is porous. mabe a search on google might do the trick. Sorry I could not be of more help.
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25 Apr 2004, 13:50 (Ref:950983) | #5 | ||
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which bearing was it referring to? if its an transverse engine, it might of been referring to the bearing which both carries the clutch and slides over the end of the crank, from memory these had a phosfer bronze type bearing, which is slightly porous and would benifit from being soaked in oil prior to fitmant.
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25 Apr 2004, 19:57 (Ref:951365) | #6 | ||
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What you're referring to is an 'Oilite' bush. They are made of a sintered bronze material, which is porous & oil-impregnated before installation. There are also similar bearings (can't remember the brand name) which are made of a similar material but PTFE-impregnated.
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26 Apr 2004, 03:54 (Ref:951686) | #7 | |||
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errrrrhh Noooooo!
Quote:
Sadly, that is not what I am on about, a friends Austin Healey 1275 had "porous" main bearings (which had somehow become "porous") and that was the problem. He had to overhaul the crank and bearings before he could drive it again, hence the question re porosity!!! |
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26 Apr 2004, 06:34 (Ref:951793) | #8 | ||||
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Re: errrrrhh Noooooo!
Quote:
Quote:
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28 Apr 2004, 12:50 (Ref:954605) | #9 | ||
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If you replace the word porous with knackered then you are probably closer to the mark. Shell bearings provide the 'soft' surface, only a few microns thick, and the crank journal the 'hard' surface. Hopefully a few molecules of oil keep the two apart!
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28 Apr 2004, 13:08 (Ref:954627) | #10 | ||
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Quote:
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28 Apr 2004, 16:56 (Ref:954832) | #11 | ||
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Phosphour Bronze (similar in colour to brass) is an example of a porous material. If you soak this in oil, especially under pressure, oil seeps into the 'pores' of the material and gives it a 'natural' lubricant. Often used where grease or oil causes problems and a lubricated joint is required.
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29 Apr 2004, 09:14 (Ref:955489) | #12 | |||
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Quote:
Close, but no cigar! Phoshor bronze in its natural state is not porous. Porous bearings (such as Oilite, which I referred to earlier) are made by sintering; metal powder is compacted in a press to produce blanks which are then heated to fuse the particles together to make a rigid bearing. Bearings may be impregnated before sintering with solid lubricants, such as graphite, PTFE, etc., or oil-impregnated after sintering. Getting back to the original post, here's a quotation from 'Powder Metallurgy for Engineers' on the subject of steel-backed bearings, as used for mains & big ends: >>Steel-backed Bearings Bearings of this type are produced in very large quantities for all types of internal combustion engine. As the name implies, the bearing is of composite construction with two or three of these main components a steel shell which serves to support the bearing during manufacture and in service; a sintered lining applied to the shell and bonded to it during the manufacturing process; it may be porous or fully densified; a surface layer which may be applied as an overlay to a fully dense layer or as an impregnant into a porous substrate.<< |
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29 Apr 2004, 12:05 (Ref:955644) | #13 | |||
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beginning to understand....
Quote:
Last edited by 275 GTB-4; 29 Apr 2004 at 12:07. |
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29 Apr 2004, 12:32 (Ref:955681) | #14 | |||
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Re: beginning to understand....
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30 Apr 2004, 11:51 (Ref:956741) | #15 | ||
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Dave,
Thanks for that additional information. I will add it to my knowledge database. Most informative James |
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